Teddy Kollek

Teddy Kollek, byname of Theodor Herzl Kollek, (born May 27, 1911, near Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now in Hungary]—died Jan. 2, 2007, Jerusalem, Israel), Israeli politician, who was mayor of Jerusalem from 1965 to 1993.

Kollek, who grew up in Vienna, moved to Palestine in 1934. There he helped found the Ein Gev kibbutz and became active in the Betar Zionist Youth Movement. He also helped organize the clandestine immigration of Jews to Palestine and the rescue of young people from Germany and German-occupied countries during World War II. Kollek was a staff member of the political department of the Jewish Agency, which was closely connected with the work of the underground Jewish paramilitary group, Haganah, and was placed in charge of contacting European Jewish underground movements in 1942. After the war he traveled to the United States, soliciting aid for the Jewish fight for independence. After Israel achieved statehood in 1948, he served as a diplomat to the United States and from 1952 to 1964 was director general of the office of Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion.

Noted for his energy and enthusiasm, Kollek was elected mayor of Jerusalem in 1965. At the time, the city was divided into Israeli (west Jerusalem) and Jordanian (east Jerusalem) sectors. Seeking to restore the beauty of the holy city, Kollek initiated a clean-up program and oversaw the building of the Israel Museum. Following Israel’s success in the Six-Day War of June 1967, he became mayor of united Jerusalem and quickly introduced reforms and improvements in the eastern portion of the city. He strove to unite—physically as well as psychologically—the Arab and Israeli communities within the city. In 1993 Kollek, by then in his eighties, was defeated in his bid for a seventh term as mayor.